Transcript Slide 1

Chapter 23 Section 2
Handout
Clouds and Fog
1
• A collection of small water droplets or ice
crystals falling slowly through the air a(n)
– Cloud
2
• The crystals or droplets that make up
clouds form when condensation or
sublimation occurs more quickly than the
process of:
– Evaporation
3
• A cloud that forms near or on Earth’s
surface is:
– Fog
4
• What must be available for water vapor to
condense and form a cloud?
– A solid surface
5
• The lowest layer of the atmosphere is the
– troposphere
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• What is present in the troposphere that is
essential for cloud formation?
– Tiny suspended particles
Dust from Africa's Saharan Desert lingers in high altitudes
as it crosses the Atlantic Ocean. This picture was taken
from an aircraft northeast of Barbados in 2006. Cumulus
clouds can be seen poking through the tops of the dust
layer, which is seen as a milky white haze.
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• Suspended particles that provide a surface
for water vapor to condense are called
– Condensation nuclei
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• What happens when water molecules
collect on condensation nuclei?
– Water droplets form
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• What condition must the air be in for
clouds to form?
– The rate of condensation must be higher than
the rate of evaporation.
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• The net condensation that forms clouds
may be caused by
– The cooling of air
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• What happens to molecules in rising air?
– They move farther apart.
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• What occurs in adiabatic cooling?
– The temperature of an air mass decreases as
the air rises.
13
• What does the adiabatic lapse rate
describe?
– The rate at which the temperature of rising or
sinking air changes
14
• What is the adiabatic lapse rate of clear
air?
– -1oC for every 100m that air rises
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• What is the average adiabatic lapse rate of
cloudy air?
– Between -0.5oC and -0.9oC per 100 m that air
rises
16
• Why does cloudy air have a slower rate of
cooling than clear air?
– Because of the release of latent heat as water
condenses.
17
• What two things happen to the energy
from the sun when it reaches Earth’s
surface?
– Earth’s surface absorbs it and then reradiates
it as heat
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• Describe what happens to air near Earth’s
surface.
– It absorbs heat, it rises, expands, and then
cools
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• What is the name of the altitude where
net condensation begins to form clouds?
– Condensation level
20
• How does the mixing of two bodies of
moist air with different temperatures
cause clouds to form?
– The combination causes the temperature of
air to change. The combined air may be
cooled to below its dew point, which results in
clouds.
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• What are the results of air being forced
upward?
– The cooling of the air and cloud formation.
22
• What kind of terrain may force air
upward?
– Sloping terrain, such as a mountain range
23
• How do large clouds associated with storm
systems form?
– As a mass of cold, dense air enters an area
and pushes a less dense mass of warmer air
upward.
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• What is the name of the process in which
the temperature of an air mass decreases
as it moves over a cold surface, such as
cold ocean or land?
– Advective cooling
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• What happens when an air mass moves
over a surface colder than the air is?
– The cold surface absorbs heat from the air
and the air cools.
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• What must happen in order for air cooled
by adiabatic cooling, mixing, lifting, or
advective cooling to form clouds?
– The air must be cooled to below its dew
point.
27
• What two features are used to classify
clouds?
– Shape and altitude
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• Name the three basic forms of clouds.
– Stratus, cumulus, and cirrus
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• What are the three altitude groups of
clouds and their heights?
– Low clouds (0 to 2,000m)
– Middle clouds (2,000 to 6,000m)
– High clouds (above 6,000m)
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• Stratus clouds:
– Clouds with a flat base forming at very low
altitudes.
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• Altostratus clouds:
– Middle-altitude clouds that usually produce
little precipitation.
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• Cumulus clouds:
– Billowy, low-altitude clouds
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• Cumulonimbus clouds:
– High, dark storm clouds
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• Cirrus clouds:
– Feathery clouds composed of ice crystals.
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• Cirrostratus clouds:
– Clouds that form at a high, transparent veil.
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• Clouds that form where a layer of warm,
moist air lies above a layer of cool air are
called:
– stratus
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• What do the prefix nimbo and the suffix
nimbus mean?
– rain
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• How do nimbostartus clouds differ form
other stratus clouds?
– They can cause heavy precipitation
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• What does cumulus mean?
– “piled” or “heaped”
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• What does the characteristic flat base of
cumulus clouds represent?
– The condensation level
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• On what two factors does the height of a
cumulus cloud depend?
– On the stability of the troposphere and on the
amount of moisture in the air.
42
• In what kind of weather do cumulus
clouds grow highest?
– Hot, humid days
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• What are cumulus clouds at middle
latitudes called?
– Altocumulus clouds
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• Name the low clouds that are a
combination of two kinds of clouds.
– Stratocumulus clouds
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• What do cirrus and cirro mean?
– “curly”
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• At what altitude do cirrus clouds form?
– At altitudes above 6,000m
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• Why does light easily pass through cirrus
clouds?
– Because they are thin
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• What kind of clouds often apperar before
a snowfall or rainfall?
– Cirrocumulus
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• Compare and contrast fog and clouds.
– Fog and clouds are bothe the result of the
condensation of water vapor in the air, but fog
is much nearer Earth’s surface than clouds
and forms differently.
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• Radiation fog:
– Forms due to the loss of heat by radiation
when Earth cools at night.
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• Advection fog:
– Forms when warm, moist air from above
water moves over a cold surface.
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• Upslope fog
– Forms when air rises along land slopes.
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• Steam fog:
– Forms when cool air moves over an inland
warm body of water.
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• Why is radiation fog thickest in valleys and
other low places?
– Because dense, cold air sinks to low
elevations.
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• Why is radiation fog often thick around
cities?
– Smoke and dust particles act as condensation
nuclei.
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• Where is advection fog common?
– Along coasts